ORCS: Army of Shadows (16 page)

Read ORCS: Army of Shadows Online

Authors: Stan Nicholls

Tags: #FIC009020

A jungle embraced them. At first it seemed endurable. Then gigantic swarms of flying insects appeared, tenacious and hungry.
They covered the band, fibrous wings beating, stingers seeking unprotected skin. Stryke manoeuvred the stars into another
configuration.

They were deposited on a vast, featureless plain, the only variation being a distant range of blue-black mountains. Three
Suns beat down, one of them bloody red. Of more immediate import were the two armies the Wolverines found themselves between.
One consisted of creatures resembling giant lizards, with purple hides and flicking, barbed tongues. The other was made up
of beasts that seemed to be a cross between bears and apes, only with four arms. Each horde numbered in the hundreds of thousands,
and they were moving rapidly forward, with the warband squarely in their path, like a nut in a vice. Stryke fiddled with the
instrumentalities.

Icy salt spray splashed their faces. They were on a tiny rock in the middle of a turbulent ocean, battered by winds and towering
waves, beneath an angry sky. The rock was jagged and slippery, and the band clung to each other for fear of falling and being
swept away. Stryke acted.

He kept on readjusting the stars as they were transported from world to world in search of somewhere bearable.

In dizzying succession they flashed in and out of lands of startling diversity, including some they found incomprehensible
as well as hostile. In one they were attacked by carnivorous birds; another was an environment with a noxious gas for its
atmosphere that they were lucky to escape in time. They witnessed abundant orc-sized fish emerging from a huge lake, revealing
legs, and jaws bristling with fangs; sentient snakes as big as elephants, devouring each other; a land of perpetual earthquakes
where enormous fissures opened and closed with frightening rapidity; a world stifled by sulphur and riddled with blue lava
flows; a mighty river inhabited by multi-tentacled beasts with the faces of rodents; gigantic flies that supped on struggling
spiders in sticky webs that spanned valleys; a place where great prides of felines waged war amongst themselves; rampaging
worms as large as mature oaks; dominions ruled by plagues of rats, and on and on.

Eventually they materialised somewhere that didn’t seem immediately threatening. It was a dead world. They couldn’t tell if
the desolation was the result of war or natural disaster, but it seemed complete. Not far away stood acres of debris and twisted
uprights, just recognisable as the ruins of a city. There was no sign of life anywhere, not even vegetation, which the soil
looked incapable of supporting in any event. Everything was grey and spent.

The Wolverines stood wordlessly for several minutes, in anticipation of something unfriendly happening. When it didn’t, they
did more than relax. They collapsed exhaustedly. They were in a sorry state: drenched, tattered, bruised and bleeding. The
tyros were near unhinged, and Standeven was a wreck. Some of the band were vomiting. Others nursed wounds or crouched with
their heads in their hands.


That was… one… hell of a… ride
,” Coilla said when she stopped fighting for breath.


Couldn’t… set the… stars… properly
,” Stryke gasped back.
“No… chance to.”

She started to pull herself together, as most of the others were doing. “I… know. Who would… have thought… so many… of the
worlds were… so shitty?”

“Least it looks safe here.”

“Maybe.” She surveyed the barren landscape suspiciously.

“We’ll rest for a bit, tend wounds. Then I’ll fit the stars for Ceragan.”

She nodded and perched herself on a half-melted rock, head down, arms dangling.

As soon as he could, Stryke got some of the recovering grunts to mount guard. He had Dallog look at injuries, fortunately
none of which called for major treatment, and ordered iron rations to be broken out.

They spent the next hour or more recuperating and getting their heads straight, during which time Jup came to Stryke with
a question.

“What do we do about the humans?”

“Do?”

“Yeah. You planning on taking them back to Ceragan with you? Come to that, what about me and Spurral?”

“I’ve not been thinking straight,” Stryke confessed. “That’s a problem I hadn’t weighed.”

“Can’t be blamed for that. But what
are
you going to do with us non-orcs?”

“You and Spurral are welcome to join us in Ceragan. You’d be the only dwarfs, but you wouldn’t be without comrades.”

“That’s a generous offer, Stryke, and I thank you for it. But I’m guessing it’s not one you’d be happy making to Pepperdyne
and Standeven.”

“No, there’d be no place there for
them
. But suppose we took them back to Maras-Dantia?”


That
I hadn’t thought of. Seems right, seeing as it’s where you picked them up in the first place.”

“We could do the same for you. Get you back to your own kind.”

Jup sighed. “I dunno, Stryke. We had good reasons for leaving. I’m not sure either of us would relish going back, for all
that we were born there. Maras-Dantia’s fit only to break hearts these days.”

“Then my offer of Ceragan stands. Who knows? Maybe we can figure out how to use the stars to find a dwarf world for you.”

Jup grinned. “Trying to get rid of us already and we’re not there yet. But I reckon we’ve got no real option. Though I’ve
doubts about us ever finding a dwarf needle in that haystack of worlds we’ve just seen.”

“Maybe. Anyway, that’s settled. Maras-Dantia for the humans and you two with us.”

“I’ll have to talk it over with Spurral, mind. But I reckon she’ll agree with me.”

Stryke nodded. “Don’t be too long about it. I want to get out of this place.”

The dwarf glanced at the bleakness surrounding them. “You’re not alone.”

He left.

Coilla took his place. “Had any ideas on who they might have been?”

“Who?”

“You’re not working with a sharpened sword yet, are you, Stryke? Who do you think I mean? That mixed bunch of races that tried
frying us, of course.”

“No. We’ve seen a lot we can’t explain these last few hours; they got kind of pushed out of my head.”

“But what do you reckon? Bandits? Mercenaries?”

“With the way their ranks were made up? And with magic? Really
powerful
magic? I’ve never seen any marauders like them before.”

“And all they wanted was the stars. Why?”

He shrugged. “Damned if I can figure it.”

“Know what I can’t understand? Why didn’t that elf… what was her name?”

He thought about it. “Madayar. Pelli Madayar.”

“Right. Why didn’t she kill us when she had the chance? I reckon she could have, with magic that strong. Don’t you?”

Stryke nodded.

“Yet she just gave us a bit of a knock. And those magic beams or whatever they were —funny how none of them took any of us
out, isn’t it?”

“It does seem… odd,” he conceded. “Maybe she lied about being with Jennesta, or maybe they
were
mercenaries who saw the value of the stars.”

“How did they know we had them? Or even that they existed?”

“I… don’t know. But does it really matter? How likely is it we’ll run into them again?”

“There’s something you’re forgetting. That Madayar more or less told us they’d come from somewhere else,
like we did
. That can mean only one thing, Stryke. They can world-hop too.”

“But they’d have to have stars to do that.”

“Unless there’s another way we don’t know about. Mind you, who says we’ve got the only set there is?”

“If they’ve stars of their own, why did they want ours?”

“Search me. Maybe they collect the bloody things. What I’m trying to say is that if they have stars, could be we haven’t seen
the last of them.”

She left him to ponder that.

Shortly after, he gathered the band.

“We’ve had an interesting day,” he told them, raising a few wry laughs. “But now we’ve had a chance to steady ourselves I
can use the stars to take us where we want to go.”

“Where’s that?” Standeven asked.

“Us and the dwarfs to our world, Ceragan. You two back where we found you.”

“Centra —Maras-Dantia?”

“Unless you want to stay here.”

“But…”

“But what? Enjoy our company so much you can’t leave us, is that it? Or maybe you’d prefer being taken back to Acurial. I’m
sure the orcs there’d be glad to see you again.”

“Don’t we get a say in this?”

“What say do you want? Stay here or go back to Maras-Dantia. That’s your choice.”

“I think you’re being very high-handed,” Standeven protested, “and you should at least —”

“Let it go,” Pepperdyne told him. He knew his one-time master still harboured thoughts of gaining the instrumentalities, and
thought even less of the idea now than he had originally.

“When I want
your
opinion —”


Let it go
,” Pepperdyne repeated coldly, laying an emphasis on the words that he hoped would convey to Standeven exactly what it really
was he should let go of. “We’re lucky Stryke doesn’t leave us here. Or somewhere worse.”

“Too fucking right you are,” Haskeer interjected. “Though I reckon it’s what we ought to do.”

“We do things my way,” Stryke reminded him. “Maras-Dantia it is.” He took out the instrumentalities and laid them on a rock
beside him. Then he reached into his shirt for the pendant. “Get ready to brace yourselves.”

He was becoming more adept at fitting the stars together, and now he did it with great caution, careful to follow exactly
the order that would get them to their old homeworld.

Just before he clacked the fifth one into place he took a look at the faces staring at him. Many were apprehensive. Several,
notably Standeven’s and Wheam’s, wore expressions that were positively sickly. Stryke couldn’t altogether blame them. He wasn’t
looking forward to what came next himself.

He slammed the star into position.

Reality instantly dissolved and the now-familiar, dread sensation of falling was on them again. They were drawn through the
hellish kaleidoscope with no more means of controlling their passage than if they had been leaves in a gale. The only scrap
of comfort they had was knowing where they’d end up
.

Several lifetimes later, as it seemed, they came to themselves in another actuality
.

They were standing on a large circular rock that had been raised like a dais and smoothed flat. The rock was inside a colossal
cavern. Surrounding it were a hundred or more startled dwarfs, apparently in the throes of some kind of ritual. Stryke began
fumbling with the stars. The dwarfs moved faster. Scores of them swarmed up onto the rock podium, and in a second the tips
of multiple spears were pressing against the Wolverines’ throats.

“I don’t think this is Maras-Dantia,” Coilla said.

14

Two things saved the Wolverines’ lives: their seemingly miraculous arrival and the presence of Jup and Spurral.

All the dwarfs surrounding the warband were male. They wore kilts woven from coarse material, and sandals, but were bare-chested.
Many had necklaces of animal teeth, and a few sported brightly coloured feather headdresses. They were armed with daggers
and the stout, bone-tipped spears that currently menaced the warband.

It was obvious that the dwarfs had never seen anything like orcs before, and regarded them with open amazement. The humans
they looked upon with disdain, if not actual hatred. But they were confounded most by Jup and Spurral, and it was apparently
because of them that they stayed their hands. They either gaped at the couple with something like awe or avoided their gaze
almost shyly, keeping their eyes downcast.

“They seem ’specially taken with you and Spurral, Jup,” Stryke said, a spear pressing against his throat. “Talk to them.”

Jup looked doubtful but gave it a go. “Er… We come in peace.”

“That was original,” Coilla muttered.

“Doesn’t look like it worked,” Stryke said.

The dwarfs had blank expressions.

Jup tried again, carefully mouthing, “We are friends. There’s no need to fight us.”

“Kill us, you mean,” Coilla remarked under her breath.

Still the dwarfs were baffled.

“Try Mutual,” Stryke suggested.

Jup raised a sceptical eyebrow. “Really?”

“Got a better idea?”

“We mean you no harm and we’re here as friends,” Jup said in Mutual, the common tongue used by most of the races of Maras-Dantia.

Comprehension dawned on the dwarfs.

One of them, an older individual with a particularly impressive headdress, who was presumably some kind of elder, replied
in Mutual, “You come from the sky?”

“Well, what do you know,” Haskeer whispered hoarsely.

Jup glanced Stryke’s way for a lead. Stryke managed to give him the tiniest of nods.

“Yes,” Jup announced, feeling faintly ridiculous. “Yes, we are here from the sky.” He raised his eyes heavenward, theatrically.

A chorus of gasps and exclamations of wonderment came from the dwarfs.

“These are your servants?” the elderly one asked, indicating the band.

“Oh, yeah,” Jup confirmed. “They serve my every need.”

“And these?” He pointed his spear at Pepperdyne and Standeven. “They are your prisoners?”

“Uhm. Well…”

“Do you want them executed now?”

“Exe —No.
No
. They’re… I’ve decided they should be my slaves.”

“It’s never wise to allow these creatures to live.”

“With you there,” Haskeer agreed in an undertone.

The humans, unfamiliar with Mutual, hadn’t a clue about what was being said.

“What’s going on?” Pepperdyne asked Stryke softly.

“Don’t worry about it,” he mouthed back.

Jup having faltered somewhat, Spurral decided to push their luck, and took a hand.

“We choose to allow them their lives,” she told the elder imperiously, “for the time being. Now release us.
Immediately!

The elder flinched, then looked alarmed. He snapped something to his fellows in their own slightly guttural tongue.

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